IVF is popular. It is also not pro-life
In vitro fertilization has grown in popularity in recent years. There are myriad reasons for this. Heterosexual couples who delay parenthood for career, financial, or lifestyle reasons may use IVF to start a family later in life. Additionally, unpartnered single women or LGBT couples who desire children might use IVF to create a family unit. […]
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In vitro fertilization has grown in popularity in recent years. There are myriad reasons for this. Heterosexual couples who delay parenthood for career, financial, or lifestyle reasons may use IVF to start a family later in life. Additionally, unpartnered single women or LGBT couples who desire children might use IVF to create a family unit. Regardless of the root causes, the GOP must address this cultural and reproductive surge. When one looks deeper into the issue of IVF, the ethical concerns cannot be ignored. On the surface, IVF appears to be just an alternative path to having children. The party that bills itself as pro-family and generally anti-abortion should be behind that, right? Recommended Stories Big schooling unions are digging a deeper hole.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.